Mutation scanning by meltMADGE: Validations using BRCA1 and LDLR, and demonstration of the potential to identify severe, moderate, silent, rare, and paucimorphic mutations in the general population
- Khalid K. Alharbi1,7,
- Mohammed A. Aldahmesh1,7,
- Emmanuel Spanakis1,8,
- Lema Haddad5,9,
- Roslyn A. Whittall5,
- Xiao-he Chen1,
- Hamid Rassoulian2,
- Matt J. Smith1,
- Julie Sillibourne1,
- Nicola J. Ball1,
- Nikki J. Graham1,
- Patricia J. Briggs1,
- Iain A. Simpson3,
- David I.W. Phillips4,
- Deborah A. Lawlor6,
- Shu Ye1,
- Stephen E. Humphries5,
- Cyrus Cooper4,
- George Davey Smith6,
- Shah Ebrahim6,
- Diana M. Eccles1, and
- Ian N.M. Day1,10
- 1 Human Genetics Division, School of Medicine, University of Southampton, Southampton University Hospitals NHS Trust, Southampton SO16 6YD, United Kingdom
- 2 Medical Engineering, Developmental Origins of Health and Disease Division, School of Medicine, University of Southampton, Southampton University Hospitals NHS Trust, Southampton SO16 6YD, United Kingdom
- 3 Wessex Cardiothoracic Centre, Developmental Origins of Health and Disease Division, School of Medicine, University of Southampton, Southampton University Hospitals NHS Trust, Southampton SO16 6YD, United Kingdom
- 4 MRC Epidemiology Resource Centre, Developmental Origins of Health and Disease Division, School of Medicine, University of Southampton, Southampton University Hospitals NHS Trust, Southampton SO16 6YD, United Kingdom
- 5 Division of Cardiovascular Genetics, University College, London, United Kingdom; Department of Medicine, British Heart Foundation Laboratories, Royal Free and University College Medical School, London WC1E 6JJ, United Kingdom
- 6 Department of Social Medicine, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 2PR, United Kingdom
Abstract
We have developed a mutation-scanning approach suitable for whole population screening for unknown mutations. The method, meltMADGE, combines thermal ramp electrophoresis with MADGE to achieve suitable cost efficiency and throughput. The sensitivity was tested in blind trials using 54 amplicons representing the BRCA1 coding region and a panel of 94 unrelated family breast cancer risk consultands previously screened in a clinical diagnostic laboratory. All 10 common polymorphisms, 15/15 previously identified disease-causing mutations, and three previously untested single base changes were identified. Assays of LDLR exons 3 and 8 were validated in 460 familial hypercholesteremics and detected 8/9 known variants. We then applied the exon 3 assay in several DNA banks representing ∼8000 subjects with known cholesterol values and applied both assays in one DNA bank (n = 3600). In exon 3 we identified one previously reported moderate mutation, P84S (n = 1), also associated with moderate hypercholesteremia in this subject; an unreported silent variant, N76N (n = 1); and known severe hypercholesteremia splice mutation 313+1G→A (n = 2). Around exon 8 we identified a paucimorphism (n = 35) at the splice site 1061–8T→C (known to be in complete linkage disequilibrium with T705I) and unreported sequence variants 1186+11G→A (n = 1) and D335N G→A (n = 1). The cholesterol value for D335N was on the 96.2 percentile and for T705I, 2/35 carriers were above the 99th percentile. Thus, variants with predicted severe, moderate, and no effect were identified at the population level. In contrast with case collections, CpG mutations predominated. MeltMADGE will enable definition of the full population spectrum of rare, paucimorphic, severe, moderate (forme fruste), and silent mutations and effects.
Footnotes
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[Supplemental material is available online at www.genome.org.]
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Article and publication are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.3313405.
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↵7 These authors contributed equally to this work.
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↵8 Present address: Aventis Functional Genomics Center, 2 Rue Gaston Cremieux, CP 5705, F-91057 Evry Genomics Center Cedex, France.
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↵9 Present address: North East Thames Regional Molecular Genetics Laboratory, Camilla Botnar Laboratories, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Sick Children, London WC1N 3JH, UK.
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↵10 Corresponding author. E-mail inmd{at}soton.ac.uk; fax 44 (0)23 80794264.
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- Accepted May 9, 2005.
- Received October 4, 2004.
- Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press











